Affleck's 'Argo' takes home Oscar gold

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Hollywood's biggest night of patting itself on the back, the 85th annual Academy Awards, hit a new level of self-celebration on Sunday night, giving Best Picture to "Argo," a true-life tale in which movie producers played a role in saving people's lives.

"Argo," director Ben Affleck's gritty thriller about a daring CIA plot to rescue six Americans from the Ayatollah's Iran, won three Oscars: Best Picture, and for Chris Terrio's adapted screenplay and William Goldenberg's film editing.

"Argo" wasn't the movie to take home the most Oscars. "Life of Pi," the life-affirming survival tale of an Indian boy on a lifeboat with a Bengal tiger, won four Oscars  for director Ang Lee, as well as for Mychael Danna's score, and for visual effects and cinematography.

Lee's win was one of a number of surprises Sunday night. The biggest was the double win for Quentin Tarantino's controversial slavery-era blaxploitation homage, "Django Unchained," which took Oscars for Tarantino's original screenplay and Christoph Waltz's supporting performance as a German bounty hunter. It was Waltz's second Oscar in four years, the other also for a Tarantino movie, "Inglourious Basterds."

Affleck, who was not nominated for Best Director but produced "Argo" with George Clooney and Grant Heslov, was humble in his Best Picture acceptance speech, first by praising the other eight Best Picture nominees, which he said "have as much a right to be up here as we do."

Affleck won an Oscar for co-writing "Good Will Hunting" with Matt Damon 15 years ago and said that, back then, "I didn't know what I was doing." He thanked people in Hollywood who helped him during the low points in his career, "when they couldn't benefit from it. I couldn't get them a job."

He ended his speech with inspirational advice: "It doesn't matter how you get knocked down in life. All that matters is that you gotta get up."

The most gracious speech of the night was delivered by Day-Lewis, who became the first man to win three Best Actor Oscars. Day-Lewis joked about his presenter, Meryl Streep, and director Steven Spielberg. Then he acknowledged his wife, the filmmaker Rebecca Miller, who "has lived with some very strange men the last 16 years. â¦ She's been the versatile one in the family and she's been welcoming to every one of them."

Lawrence's acceptance speech, after tripping over her voluminous gown, was brief as she seemed overwhelmed by the moment.

Hathaway said "It came true" as she looked at her Oscar, and after thanking many people offered this wish: "Here's hoping that someday the misfortunes of Fantine will only be found in stories and not in real life."

An obscure category, Sound Editing, made news with the third tie in Oscar history. The award was shared by the sound editors for the James Bond movie "Skyfall" and the real-life spy story "Zero Dark Thirty."

"Skyfall" also won the Oscar for Original Song, performed by its co-writer, Adele Atkins. It is the first time a Bond theme has won an Oscar.

The ceremony had its share of surprises. First lady Michelle Obama, via satellite from the White House, announced "Argo's" Best Picture win. Barbra Streisand ended the "In Memoriam" segment by singing her 1973 hit "The Way We Were" (written by Marvin Hamlisch, who died last year). And Dame Shirley Bassey closed out a 50th anniversary James Bond tribute by belting out her 1964 classic "Goldfinger."

The biggest surprise of the night is that the host, "Ted" director and "Family Guy" creator Seth MacFarlane, didn't completely stink at the most thankless job in entertainment. Some of his one-liners were a bit rude, but he delivered them with good spirits and with a showman's sense of reading the room.

MacFarlane's biggest misstep may have been the "Here's to the Losers" musical number he and Kristen Chenoweth performed at the end of the 3Â½-hour ceremony. But most viewers, in the Dolby Theatre or at home, probably weren't listening anyway. 

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